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Frieze New York 2022
feature

From Latinx artists to new takes on Surrealism, curator Marcela Guerrero’s favourite works at Frieze New York

Eight must-see works of art from the Whitney Museum of American Art's associate curator

Gabriella Angeleti. Photographs by Allison Dinner
20 May 2022
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Marcela Guerrero, an associate curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art

Marcela Guerrero, an associate curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art

Marcela Guerrero, an associate curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art, is spearheading two major exhibitions this year: No Existe Un Mundo Poshuracán: Puerto Rican Art in the Wake of Hurricane Maria and Martine Gutierrez: Supremacy. She was part of the team behind the seminal show Vida Americana: Mexican Muralists Remake American Art, 1925-1945 and as a curatorial fellow at the Hammer Museum helped curate Radical Women: Latin American Art, 1960-1985. Guerrero has made significant contributions to the Latinx art field, but her own taste is eclectic. Here, she shares her favourite works at the fair.

Photo: Allison Dinner

Tania Candiani, El Sonido del Fuego (2021)

Instituto de Visión

“This work has a sonic element and a video component examining the making of glass sculptures, and how that transformation from fire to glass creates a sound. It captures a sound of that transubstantiation and looks into the artisanal labour that goes into glass-blowing and how glass is also an industrial medium.”

Photo: Allison Dinner

Eamon Ore-Giron, Infinite Regress series (2015-ongoing)

James Cohan

“Eamon Ore-Giron is more attuned than most abstract artists I know to reference points, like references to South America during colonial times. He’s also a musician; his work appears to synthesise various music from Peru, Mexico, Colombia, and translates beats and music to painting.”

Photo: Allison Dinner

Clarissa Tossin, #AmazonisPlanitia3 (2019)

Galeria Luisa Strina

“Clarissa Tossin often bridges Brazilian and US history—her project Fordlândia examined how the architecture of a Ford campus in Michigan was replicated in the Amazon. Here she’s critiquing other toxic elements produced by global forces, creating sculptures using Indigenous weaving techniques.”

Photo: Allison Dinner

Homa Delvaray, The Garden of Desolation series (2022)

Dastan Gallery

“The beauty of art fairs is learning about more global practices. Delvaray has a graphic design background, visible in this work, which has to do with the idea of the Persian garden and how that is a construct. She’s deconstructing that garden we all have in our minds, breaking down its components and elements.”

Photo: Allison Dinner

Danielle De Jesus, Below the 7 Train Platform (2022)

François Ghebaly

“Danielle De Jesus is an artist of Puerto Rican descent based in Bushwick. She often looks at Bushwick and how rapidly it’s being gentrified, focusing on those communities, even those that are not her own, to show how different cultural groups are using their traditions to reclaim space.”

Photo: Allison Dinner

Lynn Randolph, Choreographer (2020)

David Lewis

“Lynn Randolph illustrated work for the writer Donna Haraway at one point. She’s interested in post-human worlds while still retaining elements of previous art history moments. It’s hard to see this and not think of William Blake. It takes us outside the realm of earthly knowledge, prompting us to think about more divine creatures.”

Photo: Allison Dinner

Carlos Motta, Untitled (1998)

Mor Charpentier

“Carlos Motta, born in Colombia, was only 20 years old when he made this. His work can make one think of Ana Mendieta and how she manipulated her gender expressions. Queering the body and the way that the body is read has also always been a concern for Motta. He’s one of those artists who, depending on the context, could be considered mid-career or emerging although he has a good two decades working as an artist.”

Photo: Allison Dinner

Ronny Quevedo, Errant Globe (2015)

Alexander Gray

“I tend to gravitate toward artists who I feel are showing something refreshing that perhaps moves away from didactic figuration. I appreciate Ronny Quevedo’s efforts to create an abstract language. In some works, it’s evident how his cosmological understanding of the world overlaps with his biography as an artist raised in the Bronx. ”

Photo: Allison Dinner

Kate Mosher Hall, Luck (2022)

Hannah Hoffman

“There are so many artists now connecting Surrealist traditions to the present, as Cecilia Alemani did in the Venice Biennale. Kate Mosher Hall is one of the artists working in that vein. You’re not quite sure what you’re looking at in these works; the abstraction and distortion of whatever figure she was capturing at first becomes a dreamscape. She is very technically proficient.”

Frieze New York 2022InterviewFairs
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